Because the beaver isn't just an animal; it's an ecosystem!

Month: June 2010


Last nights visit to the beaver dam was as full of devoted beaver fans as I can remember. There was much excitement waiting for the young star to appear. One couple drove up from Hayward specifically for the viewing. Others were first time visitors who had read about it in the chronicle and wanted to stop by. A handsome yearling made the first appearance at 7:30. He is almost as big as dad, but much braver and easier to spot. He is clearly the reason we have such lovely mudwork all along the primary dam because he stopped to do a little patch job before going over.

Mom was next with her scruffy hair do and swollen eyes. She fed on willow and hunted about for her new seasonal favorite treat: sow thistle. (I just read that the plant is used in herbal remedies to treat high blood pressure and fever. Hmm) She has been seen climbing up the banks in search of June’s offering d’jour. Not sure what she loves about this scraggly plant, but she definitely loves. it. I remember because she was in the habit of swiping some from the bank next to the elections building when they were busy counting votes two Junes ago. A lot of election officials got an unexpected treat as mum scrambled up the bank and snatched a sow thistle three feet away.

Photo: Cheryl Reynolds

At 8:30 the little paddler made his dramatic entrance swimming from the the lodge past the filter and into full view. No greeting of mum this time, just a determined snatch of willow and then back to the lodge. The crowd was adoringly crushed. Is that all we’re going to get? Did you see that tail? That nose?  After some more appreciative dialogue, his highness came back. This time he padded onto the dam to snatch an apricot left one of our generous-spirited homeless. He liked that so much he stuck around to take a bit of mom’s fennel, shown above.

It is possible we were watching two different kits at two different times. This visit s/he definitely seemed more confident, more “beavery” and able to scramble on his own. There was some confusion about who’s who and whether mom beaver had died, and dad had ‘remarried’. (!)  I thought I’d show you the genealogy as best we know it. Dates in blue show when the kits of that year were first filmed. Red boxes indicate confirmed current lodge residents. Green boxes show the kits that died of parasite and purple show our yearlings that have successfully launched.

Got that? Now you know as much as we do about the beaver family history.

If seven maids with seven mops
Swept it for half a year.
Do you suppose,” the Walrus said,
“That they could get it clear?”
“I doubt it,” said the Carpenter,
And shed a bitter tear.

Lewis Carrol

Invitation?


Somebody call the child actors guild and file a complaint because the budding starlet we saw last night was certainly over contract. We waited a good long time, watching a yearling go over at 7 and mom come out to feed at 8. Of course the usual anxious despondency gripped us. Maybe the baby wouldn’t emerge? Maybe it had already come? Maybe something happened to it?

At 8:30 the tiniest treasure came paddling uncertainly along. Nose to tail she/he must be smaller than any shoe in my house. He swam out to mum for the most heart-wrenching greet and nuzzle, then climbed onto her back, gripping her fur with his teeth, for a piggy-beaver-back ride home. As they glided away he curled his tiny tail into the air like a sail.

Truly a dangerous display of cuteness. Call the police and report a dozen stolen hearts! The volume of “awwws” on the bank rose to glass-bending proportions. Several folk had come by for their very first visit, and were stunned how engaging and visible the animals were. Worth A Dam regulars, who typically answer questions and remind people to write the mayor, were so preoccupied with adoration that we could barely manage a haphazard fact or two.

Two muskrats made a jealous appearance, one on either side of the primary dam hoping to be mistaken for the main event. But then the baby came out on his own. He was swimming faster and straighter and snagged his very own piece of willow before heading back to the lodge. Not a single watcher’s heart was untouched by his button nose and tiny tail.

I don’t know if the video is any good. I kept crying too hard to edit it. Honestly it is amazing to see. You really should drop everything and come quietly down to visit before he/she gets ANY bigger!


Our newest family member was seen by the Worth A Dam gang last night at 8:30, swimming about near the primary dam and doing exactly what a beaver should. We received lots of well-wishes yesterday from people who’d seen the chronicle article. Skip Lisle wrote his congratulations and Lenard Houston of SURCP said he’s still trying to get photos of his new beaver twins to share. No sightings again this morning so I’m thinking he’s already found his rhythm and its ‘wake up early and go to bed early’. Our own LB was very excited to see him last night and posted this in the sightings page.

June 11th – Baby beaver seen swimming near the main dam around 8:30 PM and finding some willow twigs to eat and then taking some back to the lodge.  He/she is so cute and small.  Soon after a very large beaver (not Mom) came over the dam from down stream bringing back some willow branches and going towards the lodge.

There was a little flurry of news reports about the beavers yesterday. By far the most amusing one is this, a fortuitous byproduct of the massive media monopolies where everything is owned by everyone else. Clearly the best news ever printed in the Wall Street Journal and I’ll wager the only time Martinez has been discussed therein.

This week a copy of Mike Callahan’s Beaver Solutions DVD was donated to the Martinez Library which means it will be available for borrowing in all of Contra Costa and inter-library loans. If you’re curious about how to install flow device or culvert fence, or just want to see it done up close, stop by and check it out. The device used by Mike is called the “Flexible Leveler”. The one used by Skip Lisle is called the “Castor Master” (that’s what we have in Martinez) — different names and some different properties, but the same basic elements. Oh and Mike’s DVD stars the Martinez Beavers in all their swimmy glory so it’s definitely worth seeing!


Photo: Cheryl Reynolds

Ahhh the new baby always brings out the best in family and friends. Today this photo ran in the San Francisco Chronicle with a very glowing article by longtime beaver-beat reporter Carolyn Jones. The article has an “alls well that ends well” feeling, and quotes from Skip Lisle and Dave Scola as well.  I, of course, wish she had mentioned Worth A Dam or the beaver festival in the article (an article entirely structured around my press release and our half hour interview, including the latin for beaver!) but at least she got the story straight and the details of our very special family in print for all to see. And, most important, it was the first beaver article in history without a single “pun” in the title to indicate that this wasn’t “important news” and the story shouldn’t be taken seriously. You can help us out by “voting” for my comment so that the important things Carolyn forgot to mention get mentioned!

As if that wasn’t enough good news for one morning, my post yesterday about the contest in Lithuania prompted this heroic response from Alex Hiller, our foreign correspondent in Frankfurt Germany.

Thank you for your information about Riga beavers at risk. As a participant of the 5th International Beaver Symposium in Vilnius, Lithuania, the previous year I decided instantly to go to Riga, Latvia, checking on the beaver site and considering proper solutions to keep the beavers. I just got a Lufthansa flight ticket to Riga, Latvia, departing in Frankfurt, Germany on July 21 for a week to be spent over there. Expect online reports and photos as your approved foreign correspondent.
Best Alex

Skip Lisle & Alex Hiller at 5th annual Beaver Symposium in Lithuania

Alex tells me that he’s already hard at work, translating articles and looking up photos. I can’t tell you how pleased and proud we are of your committment Alex! On behalf of the beavers of baltic countries everywhere, THANK YOU!!!

One more act of kindness worth mentioning comes from our good web designer friend Jean Matuska of JM Design. I was beginning to receive ominous error messages when I posted new articles on the website, something dire about a “Fatal error” which terrified me. Jean went searching through her tool kit and  figured out the solution, redesigning our memory limits and voila! No more fatalities! Thanks so much Jean! We will leave a smaller data footprint in the future!

If seven maids with seven mops
Swept it for half a year.
Do you suppose,” the Walrus said,
“That they could get it clear?”
“I doubt it,” said the Carpenter,
And shed a bitter tear.

Lewis Carrol


Remember the Lithuanian city of Riga whose beavers were elegantly removing trees from the Opera house?

Baltic Beavers!

Beavers have felled several trees in the heart of the capital of Latvia, by the Canal, Riga City Council’s Riga Gardens and Parks Director Agnis Kalnkazins (People’s Party) informed LETA.

Is this a “dog bites man story” or what? “Beavers fell trees! News at 11″. Soon to be followed by: “Enthusiastic Dog returns stick again and again!” “Rare pirate squirrel buries nut treasure in yard” and “Feline windpipe obstruction revealed to be hair cluster!”

LETA observed today that beavers have torn down one tree in front of the Latvian National Opera, by the Alfreds Kalnins Monument; another nearby tree has been seriously damaged.

A bystander tree was wounded in the crossfire, but escaped with minor injuries.

Kalnkazins points out that battling beavers is difficult due to the fact that hunting them is prohibited and there are no resources for wrapping wire gauze around the trees to protect them.

Did that just say there are no resources for wire? Just how poor is this country? We are talking about a memorial and an Opera House. How can there be a country in which people have enough money erect a memorial and see opera but not enough to buy wire? Maybe we should start a collection? Invite Bono? Live-Wire Aid?

Well apparently they didn’t read the website because the city needs some answers, STAT! They are patiently delaying beaver killing by three months to give the townsfolk time to suggest solutions to the vaguely described intolerable problems. If a remedy can be found, their beaverish lives will be saved. If not, no one will then blame them for using the final solution. Remember this is the country that was host to the 5th International Beaver Symposium this year. I cannot imagine that ample solutions have not been offered.

But because some members of the committee did not want to be associated with killing the animals, the panel decided to launch a competition for ideas on how to deal with the beavers.“If by the autumn a better way is found to deal with the situation than catching these beavers and putting them down, then that could be done,” Diena quoted Riga city official Askolds Klavins as telling the committee.

I don’t mean to startle you, but brace yourselves. Sadly, this is obviously a pretend competition. Riga already knew the solutions  earlier when they were quoted as saying they didn’t have money for wire. The beaver symposium was held at Vytuatas Manus University a short three hour drive from Riga. I have personally written the city about painting with sand (less costly than wire!) and they know very well what to do. The public-opinion-phobic committee is simply waiting until autumn to give them cover for the beaver killing they originally decided to do back in January.

Nice wrapping, Riga. Too bad you can’t invest as much attention in your watershed.

If seven maids with seven mops
Swept it for half a year.
Do you suppose,” the Walrus said,
“That they could get it clear?”
“I doubt it,” said the Carpenter,
And shed a bitter tear.

Lewis Carrol

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